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 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique  Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble  Université Joseph Fourier Laboratoire G-SCOP 46, av Félix.

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Presentation on theme: " Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique  Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble  Université Joseph Fourier Laboratoire G-SCOP 46, av Félix."— Presentation transcript:

1  Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique  Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble  Université Joseph Fourier Laboratoire G-SCOP 46, av Félix Viallet 38031 Grenoble Cedex www.g-scop.inpg.fr Toward Automated Identification of Functional Designations of Components Based on Geometric Analysis of a DMU Ahmad SHAHWAN, Gilles FOUCAULT, Jean-Claude LEON G-SCOP Laboratory & INRIA Grenoble University, France

2 Overview Introduction –Motivation and Problematic –Literature Overview Theoretical Framework –Concepts –Reference States and Axioms From DMU to Functional Designations –Overview –Geometric Analysis –Reasoning and Inference Conclusions

3 Motivation Importance of DMUs in the product lifecycle. Different level of details are needed for different engineering needs. Courtesy Airbus EEICourtesy Airbus EEI / Laboratoire 3S A380 cockpit DMUA380 cockpit DMU for thermal simulation

4 Motivation Little or no semantic is present in a DMU! The knowledge about components designations permits the automation of the simplification process. Structural behavior Model Idealization Operation 3D  1D

5 Extracting functional denominations of components given the solid model of the product. Problematic

6 Literature Overview Literature tackled the problem of form feature identification; CAD  CAM, CAPP. We address the problem of functional designations identification; CAD  FEA, … In both cases, geometric analysis of the CAD model is needed. Existing approaches focus on component’s individual geometries. We advocate the inference based on interaction between neighboring components.

7 Literature Overview Intermediate graph representation (Joshi & Chang 1988, Gavankar & Henderson 1994, C.F. Yuen, Wong & Venuvinod 2003, Di Stefano el al. 2004). Hierarchical structures of details (Falcidieno & Giannini 1989). Expert Systems (Henderson & Anderson, 1984, Ames 1991, Bouzakis & Andreadis 2000, Sharma & Gao 2002, Sadaiah & Yadav 2002). Syntactic Pattern Recognition (Jain & Kumar 1998, Bhandarkar & Nagi 2000).

8 Concepts Solid model of a product. Functional surfaces. Conventional Interfaces: –Interference; –Contact; and –Clearance. Interference Clearance Contact

9 Reference States and Dualities Two reference states: 1.The product is mechanically isolated: no external forces. Model interactions between components to characterize internal forces. 2.The product is kinematically operational: user’s input of few kinematic constraints. Relate to two dualities, respectively: 1.Geometry/Force duality. 2.Geometry/Mobility duality.

10 DMU Input Locate Reference Surfaces Identify Conventional Interfaces Generate Intrinsic Representation Generate Conventional Interface Graph Taxonomy of CI Geometric Analysis Inference of Functional Designation Components FD DMU Functional Designations Taxonomy of FD Reasoning & Inference From DMU to Functional Designations

11 Geometric Analysis 1.Input: the product’s DMU as B-Rep. 2.Reference surfaces: locate functional surfaces (canonical shapes). 3.Identify CI: detect interference, contact, or clearance zones.

12 Geometric Analysis Generate Maximal Surfaces –Represent our surfaces intrinsically Taxonomy of CI Hyper- graph

13 Geometric Analysis Generate Conventional Interface Graph (CIG) Ref. State 1 + G/F duality  Inference of components functional properties. Ref. State 2 + G/M duality  Inference of components mobilities. Iterative process. Solid Model CIG

14 DMU Input Locate Reference Surfaces Identify Conventional Interfaces Generate Intrinsic Representation Generate Conventional Interface Graph Taxonomy of CI Geometric Analysis Inference of Functional Designation Components FD DMU Functional Designations Taxonomy of FD Reasoning & Inference From DMU to Functional Designations

15 Inference Step 1 Engine Torque Water Pressure

16 Inference Step 2 Kinematic class 1: Motionless. Kinematic class 2: Rotational motion around the axes. Kinematic class 1: Idealized part. Fixed Rotation

17 Reasoning and Inference Interfaces may lead to more than one possible solution. Criteria are needed to select the most meaningful option: –Mechanical state: minimize the amount of functions per component. –Kinematic state: No internal mobility in the general case.

18 Conclusions Preliminary work towards automatic identification of functional designations. Emphasis is put on the geometric interaction between objects (representing components) rather than the geometric properties of objects themselves. Analysis of DMUs shows the merit of this approach.

19 Thanks


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